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"Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are potentially traumatic events that can have negative, lasting effects on the health and well-being of a child. These experiences range from physical, emotional, or sexual abuse to parental divorce or the incarceration of a parent or guardian. [This book] explores how these experiences influence the cognitive, behavioral and social experiences in adulthood. This book conceptualizes the types of violence, abuse, neglect, and/or trauma that factor into ACEs. It also explores the psychopathological outcomes of ACEs among children; including neurodevelopmental and psychosocial mechanisms. By drawing on cross-cultural perspective, the authors provide insight into the variations between the adversity and trauma children experience. [It] also covers preventative measures, risk factors, and various forms of interventional treatment making this book a core read for psychologists, physicians, social workers, educators and researchers in the field." --
Psychic trauma in children. --- Psychic trauma in children --- Treatment. --- Adverse Childhood Experiences --- Mental Disorders --- psychology
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"This book provides mental health researchers and clinicians with valuable insight into the pathway that leads from developmental trauma to dysregulation and psychopathology. Incorporating science that explains the impact of early trauma, this book details the theory, mechanisms, and applications of neurobiologically informed canine-assisted psychotherapy, using illuminating case studies that demonstrate the efficacy of the author's model"--
Adverse Childhood Experiences --- Animal Assisted Therapy --- Dogs --- Therapy Animals --- Case Reports
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Looking at Trauma: A Tool Kit for Clinicians is an easy-to-use, engaging resource designed to address the challenges health care professionals face in providing much-needed trauma psychoeducation to clients with histories of childhood trauma. Developed by trauma therapists Abby Hershler and Lesley Hughes in collaboration with artist Patricia Nguyen and biomedical communications specialist Shelley Wall, this book presents twelve trauma treatment models accompanied by innovative comics. The models help clinicians provide practical information about the impacts of trauma to their clients--and support those clients in understanding and managing their distressing symptoms.Topics covered include complex posttraumatic stress disorder, stress disorder, emotion regulation, memory, relationship patterns, and self-care. Each chapter features step-by-step instructions on how to use the treatment models with clients; practical educational tips from experienced clinicians in the field of childhood trauma; interactive trauma education comics; a foundational framework focused on care for the provider; and references for further study.Intended for use in both therapeutic and classroom settings, this book is a valuable resource for all healthcare workers. In particular, social workers, psychotherapists, spiritual care providers, nurses, occupational therapists, psychologists, primary care physicians, and psychiatrists will find this tool kit indispensable.
Psychic trauma --- Psychic trauma in children. --- Psychiatry --- Adverse Childhood Experiences --- Physicians, Primary Care --- Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic --- Treatment.
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De sa naissance à son adolescence, Vermicelle tente d'échapper aux difficultés familiales qui la dépassent : absences, tabous, non-dits, violences et sexisme ordinaires. Forte de sa merveilleuse imagination, elle s'invente un univers coloré et lumineux dans lequel s'évader quand la vie s'emballe. Et nous voilà entraînés dans une fable familiale sensible et profonde : l'amour y est parfois maladroit parfois toxique, mais la résilience et le bonheur de Vermicelle , malgré des moments sombres, sont au bout du chemin.
Children and violence --- Sexism --- Resilience (Personality trait) in children --- Adverse Childhood Experiences --- Resilience, Psychological --- Enfants et violence --- Sexisme --- Psychologie --- Résilience
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Childhood adversity that is severe enough to be harmful throughout life is one of the biggest public health issues of our time, yet health care systems struggle to even acknowledge the problem. In Damaged, Dr. Robert Maunder and Dr. Jonathan Hunter call for a radical change, arguing that the medical system needs to be not only more compassionate but more effective at recognizing that trauma impacts everybody's health, from patient to practitioner. Drawing on decades of experience providing psychiatric care, Maunder and Hunter offer an open and honest window into the private world of psychotherapy. At the heart of the book is the painful yet inspiring story of Maunder's career-long work with a patient named Isaac. In unfiltered accounts of their therapy sessions, we see the many ways in which childhood trauma harms Isaac's health for the rest of his life. We also see how deeply patients can affect the doctors who care for them, and how the caring collegiality between doctors can significantly improve the medicine they practice. Damaged makes it clear that human relationships are at the core of medicine, and that a revolution in health care must start with the development of safe, respectful, and caring relationships between doctors and patients. It serves as a strong reminder that the way we care for those who suffer most reveals who we are as a society.
Adult child abuse victims --- Child abuse --- Psychic trauma. --- Psychotherapist and patient. --- Psychotherapy. --- Mental health. --- Psychological aspects. --- PTSD. --- adverse childhood experiences. --- bedside manner. --- care. --- child abuse. --- childhood trauma. --- counselling. --- doctor-patient relationships. --- empathy. --- family medicine. --- health care. --- mental health. --- psychology. --- psychotherapy.
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The articles in this Special Issue of Genealogy titled “Focus of Family Historians: How Ancestor Research Affects Self-Understanding and Well-Being” cover topics including the psychosocial motivations that impel family history research, its therapeutic and healing aspects, and the emotional outcomes of dealing with unexpected findings. Broader issues, such as the ubiquity of ancestral acknowledgement and veneration throughout history and its links with religion are also explored. Papers include scholarly interpretations of case-based material, empirical research, and interpretive literature reviews emanating from a wide range of social science disciplines.
Humanities --- Social interaction --- family history --- psychology --- ancestry --- identity construction --- family tree --- war trauma --- attachment --- identity --- immigration --- forgetting --- emotional geography --- context --- environments --- homelands --- heritage --- genealogical motivation --- family history and identity --- family history and altruism --- family history and curiosity --- secular rituals --- post-religious --- sacred stories --- pilgrimage --- family ritual --- ceremony --- historical consciousness --- family history research --- family historians --- temporal orientation --- case study --- adoption --- late-discovery --- family secrets --- shock and losses --- historical trauma --- traumatic reenactment --- psychoanalysis --- infant attachment --- stress biology --- Adverse Childhood Experiences --- genealogy --- depression --- trauma --- prolonged grief disorder --- adverse childhood experiences --- alcoholic --- alcohol use disorder --- bereavement --- biological identity --- family identity --- DNA testing --- thematic analysis --- biogeographic ancestry --- n/a --- archaeology --- bereavement studies --- continuing bonds --- problematic stuff --- ancestors --- personhood
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The articles in this Special Issue of Genealogy titled “Focus of Family Historians: How Ancestor Research Affects Self-Understanding and Well-Being” cover topics including the psychosocial motivations that impel family history research, its therapeutic and healing aspects, and the emotional outcomes of dealing with unexpected findings. Broader issues, such as the ubiquity of ancestral acknowledgement and veneration throughout history and its links with religion are also explored. Papers include scholarly interpretations of case-based material, empirical research, and interpretive literature reviews emanating from a wide range of social science disciplines.
Humanities --- Social interaction --- family history --- psychology --- ancestry --- identity construction --- family tree --- war trauma --- attachment --- identity --- immigration --- forgetting --- emotional geography --- context --- environments --- homelands --- heritage --- genealogical motivation --- family history and identity --- family history and altruism --- family history and curiosity --- secular rituals --- post-religious --- sacred stories --- pilgrimage --- family ritual --- ceremony --- historical consciousness --- family history research --- family historians --- temporal orientation --- case study --- adoption --- late-discovery --- family secrets --- shock and losses --- historical trauma --- traumatic reenactment --- psychoanalysis --- infant attachment --- stress biology --- Adverse Childhood Experiences --- genealogy --- depression --- trauma --- prolonged grief disorder --- adverse childhood experiences --- alcoholic --- alcohol use disorder --- bereavement --- biological identity --- family identity --- DNA testing --- thematic analysis --- biogeographic ancestry --- n/a --- archaeology --- bereavement studies --- continuing bonds --- problematic stuff --- ancestors --- personhood
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The articles in this Special Issue of Genealogy titled “Focus of Family Historians: How Ancestor Research Affects Self-Understanding and Well-Being” cover topics including the psychosocial motivations that impel family history research, its therapeutic and healing aspects, and the emotional outcomes of dealing with unexpected findings. Broader issues, such as the ubiquity of ancestral acknowledgement and veneration throughout history and its links with religion are also explored. Papers include scholarly interpretations of case-based material, empirical research, and interpretive literature reviews emanating from a wide range of social science disciplines.
family history --- psychology --- ancestry --- identity construction --- family tree --- war trauma --- attachment --- identity --- immigration --- forgetting --- emotional geography --- context --- environments --- homelands --- heritage --- genealogical motivation --- family history and identity --- family history and altruism --- family history and curiosity --- secular rituals --- post-religious --- sacred stories --- pilgrimage --- family ritual --- ceremony --- historical consciousness --- family history research --- family historians --- temporal orientation --- case study --- adoption --- late-discovery --- family secrets --- shock and losses --- historical trauma --- traumatic reenactment --- psychoanalysis --- infant attachment --- stress biology --- Adverse Childhood Experiences --- genealogy --- depression --- trauma --- prolonged grief disorder --- adverse childhood experiences --- alcoholic --- alcohol use disorder --- bereavement --- biological identity --- family identity --- DNA testing --- thematic analysis --- biogeographic ancestry --- n/a --- archaeology --- bereavement studies --- continuing bonds --- problematic stuff --- ancestors --- personhood
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Acute stressful experiences or high levels of chronic stress are risk factors for mental and physical disorders. Insights into the effects of posttraumatic stress disorder and other stress-related disorders experienced by war veterans, refugees, and immigrants are presented. This volume also presents examinations of the pathological effects of stress that may disrupt the normal relationships between individuals and their families. The health of individuals and their children may be enhanced by interventions to help them manage the effects of stressful life experiences and environments. Innovative and effective interventions are examined and their applications are recommended.
Stress, Psychological --- Psychophysiologic Disorders --- Psychosocial Intervention. --- Behavioral Research. --- Humanities --- Social interaction --- commercial smartwatch --- mental stress --- psychophysiological --- emotion regulation --- heart rate variability --- electrodermal activity --- posttraumatic stress disorder --- war veterans --- trauma and stressor related disorders --- adverse childhood experiences --- attachment --- psychotherapy --- glucocorticoids --- cortisol --- glucocorticoid receptor --- NR3C1 --- FKBP5 --- youth mentoring --- immigrants --- social inclusion --- psychosocial well-being --- youth health --- acculturative stress --- North Korean refugees --- child abuse --- parenting self-efficacy --- qualitative case study --- physiopathology. --- etiology.
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Acute stressful experiences or high levels of chronic stress are risk factors for mental and physical disorders. Insights into the effects of posttraumatic stress disorder and other stress-related disorders experienced by war veterans, refugees, and immigrants are presented. This volume also presents examinations of the pathological effects of stress that may disrupt the normal relationships between individuals and their families. The health of individuals and their children may be enhanced by interventions to help them manage the effects of stressful life experiences and environments. Innovative and effective interventions are examined and their applications are recommended.
Stress, Psychological --- Psychophysiologic Disorders --- Psychosocial Intervention. --- Behavioral Research. --- Humanities --- Social interaction --- physiopathology. --- etiology. --- commercial smartwatch --- mental stress --- psychophysiological --- emotion regulation --- heart rate variability --- electrodermal activity --- posttraumatic stress disorder --- war veterans --- trauma and stressor related disorders --- adverse childhood experiences --- attachment --- psychotherapy --- glucocorticoids --- cortisol --- glucocorticoid receptor --- NR3C1 --- FKBP5 --- youth mentoring --- immigrants --- social inclusion --- psychosocial well-being --- youth health --- acculturative stress --- North Korean refugees --- child abuse --- parenting self-efficacy --- qualitative case study
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